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TITLE: NEWSWEEK magazine
[Vintage News-week magazine, with all the news, features, photographs and vintage ADS! -- See FULL contents below!]
ISSUE DATE: February 15, 1971; Vol. LXXVII, No. 7
CONDITION: Standard sized magazine, Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)

IN THIS ISSUE:
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COVER: SECRET: A Wider War?

TOP OF THE WEEK:
LAOS INVADED: Allied troops moved into old border battlegrounds last week--khe Sanh, Lang Vei and the A Shau Valley. Then, finally, the long-awaited order came from Washington, and South Vietnamese troops, supported by U.S. air power, mounted a momentous invasion into Laos. From reports by Maynard Parker in Saigon, Blake Smith at khe Sanh, Kevin Buckley in Vientiane, Laos, and Newsweek's Washington bureau, General Editor Russell Watson wrote the cover story. (Newsweek cover photo by Neil Ulevich.).

VISIT TO THE MOON: (Apollo 14 plaque). Shortly before he climbed back into his lunar module to prepare for the return trip to earth, Apollo 14 astronaut Alan B. Shepard Jr. carried out one task that was definitely not part of his mission. He jury-rigged a No. 6 iron for himself and played a game of one-man golf, pre sumably the first in the moon's history. Reporting the story of Apollo 14 were Washington Science correspondent Henry Simmons and Houston correspondent Kent Biffle. They filed their dispatches to Science and Space editor George Alexander, who went to Cape Kennedy for the launch and then returned to New York to write the story of man's third visit to the surface of the moon.

1971: THE YEAR OF THE CONSUMER? If the Nixon Administration is to achieve its optimistic economic goals in the next eighteen months, it will be in large measure up to that workaday figure, the U.S. consumer. Only the release of pent-up billions in consumer purchasing power can make the Nixon strategy work. From files by Rich Thomas and other Newsweek correspondents in Washington and across the country, Associate Editor Gene Koretz wrote the story. A companion piece on a key figure in the Administration's economic planning, John Connally, draws on Connally reports by Samuel Shaffer from Capitol Hill and from the Houston bureau and was written by General Editor Tom Nicholson. In addition, Milton Friedman, Paul A. Samuelson and Henry C. Wallich break their normal rotation to give their own distinctive views of U.S. economic prospects.

THE SAD YOUNG EXILES: Young Americans are crossing the border to Canada as deserters or dodgers of the U.S. armed services at the rate of more than 50 a week. Some are gifted and comfortable, some unschooled and hard up, but all share the same mixed sense of moral pride and personal dislocation. Contributing Editor Karl Fleming traveled Canada coast-to-coast to get their story.

NEWSWEEK CONTENTS LIST:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
A wider war in Indochina (the cover).
The great news embargo--or through the looking glass.
Revenue sharing--bailing out the states.
Rep. Wilbur Mills of Ways and Means.
The Congressional seniority system survives a challenge.
The sad young u.s. exiles in Canada.
'Scoop" Jackson enters the 1972 Presidential picture.
Georgia's liberal new senator.
violence in the Los Angeles barrio.
INTERNATIONAL:
The Mideast: progress toward peace.
Egypt's forgotten refugees.
Russia lets a war hero move to Israel.
Fighting flares anew in Ireland.
uganda: aftermath of a coup.
Rhodesia cracks down on a multiracial commune.
Chile's Mapuche Indians fight back.
Brazil: a case of political imprisonment.
SCIENCE AND SPACE: Apollo 14's moon visit.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
The economy--year of the consumer?.
Treasury nominee John connally on finance--private and public.
Milton Friedman, Paul A. Samuelson and Henry C. Wallich discuss inflation.
The planned jump in postal rates.
The great Mideast oil non-crisis.
The Japanese boom in South vietnam.
William J. Casey, new SEC chief.
The airlines vs. the CAB.
Rolls-Royce comes to a dead end.
EDUCATION: virginia: a governor's integration dilemma; Yale's student-loan plan.
MEDICINE: Canned tuna gets an FDA clearance; A long-sought test for penicillin allergy; The rising youthful suicide rate.
THE CITIES: New York City's winter power crisis; Beating traffic with elevated walkways; English villagers fight an airport.
SPORTS: Pro basketball's court fight over Spencer Haywood.
LIFE AND LEISURE: Surprises in the '70 census returns; How relevant are Rotarians?.
THE COLUMNISTS: Joseph Morgenstern; William P. Bundy; Clem Morgello; Stewart Alsop.

ARTS:
MOVIES: "Little Murders" urban entrapment.
BOOKS:
Barbara Tuchmans 'Stilwell".
William H. Gass's "Fiction and the Figures of Life".
James Jones's "The Merry Month of May".
Kirby Farrell's "Cony-Catching".
ART:
Jasper Johns's treasure map.
Boston's activity breakthrough.
MUSIC:
An interview with Maria CaIlas.
Minneapolis's inventive Center Opera.


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